Volvo Ocean Race: route and dates

The course and dates for the Volvo Ocean Race 2011-12 have been officially announced (click on images above). This edition will see a new format for the racing programme in the host cities, including the start in Alicante, Spain and finish in Galway, Ireland. The Azores in the Atlantic, Fernando de Noronha off the Brazilian coast and the Fastnet Rock all make an appearance on the course.

The new racing schedule for the stopovers will conclude with an action filled long weekend in the host cities: “We had two aims when changing the stopover programme,” said Knut Frostad, CEO Volvo Ocean Race. “Firstly we have reduced the time the teams are onshore and the time they have between the In-Port race and the Leg start. Traditionally the teams would change their yachts from an offshore sailing mode to an inshore racing one and back again for the Leg start. By bringing the two events together we lower the costs to them and their sponsors. In fact, we have also achieved more time for the shore crews to work on the yachts and subsequently the sailors get more time off.

“Secondly we can entertain the local public with the spectacle that is the Volvo Ocean Race on the water, for a long weekend of great racing and thrilling viewing. We hope by providing the local spectators with this on-the-water display, we will increase the public’s awareness and passion for the sport of sailing.”

The Pro-Am races will be first on the agenda for the weekend, where the sheer power of the yachts and the onshore glamour of the race are showcased to the public and race guests. These races do not count to the teams’ overall points.

The second day sees the Volvo Ocean Race teams battle it out in two In-Port races, which count to their overall scores. The short course of the In-Port races and the proximity to the stopover harbours and beaches, will allow the public to watch the exciting racing up close, as the teams push the yachts to the limits trying to gain the important extra points.

The finale will be the Leg start, where the teams say farewell to the host city and begin the offshore battle to the next destination.

There will be no scoring gates in this edition of the race, but the fleet will have to pass round some famous marks. Leg one will see the fleet pass the island of Fernando de Noronha, 200 nautical miles off the Brazilian coast, as the first proper rounding mark of the race. Due to increasing pirate attacks and hijacking off the coast of Somalia, the fleet will sail around an exclusion zone, which will be added to this area nearer race time to help reduce the risk to the yachts.

On Leg eight from Lisbon, Portugal to Lorient, France the fleet heads offshore again for a 1,940 nautical mile leg, rounding the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores before heading back towards the northwest coast of France. The Fastnet Rock is the last landmark the sailors will sail around before their final sprint up the west coast of Ireland, to the finish in Galway.

The race will visit eight stopovers on five continents in under nine months, and the Open 70’s will cover over 39,270 nautical miles.

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